T. L. Airey & Co. v. Okolona Savings Institution

33 La. Ann. 1346
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedDecember 15, 1881
DocketNo. 7848
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 33 La. Ann. 1346 (T. L. Airey & Co. v. Okolona Savings Institution) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
T. L. Airey & Co. v. Okolona Savings Institution, 33 La. Ann. 1346 (La. 1881).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Poché, J.

Plaintiffs seek to recover $2490 63, alleged to be due to' them by the defendant, as a balance of a special deposit of $4990 63 placed to their credit at the defendant bank on November 1,1878, the latter having accounted for $2500 of said deposit, but having failed to account for the balance.

After answering by general denial, the defendant admits to have received the deposit as alleged, but avers that it has fully accounted to plaintiffs for the whole of said deposit, as follows: That said sum of money had been entrusted to defendant, for the purpose of being paid out for purchases of cotton, to be made in Okolona, Miss., by plaintiffs’ customers or agents, at the demand or order of the latter. That, in obedience to instructions received by defendant from plaintiflb’ agent and solicitor, Seymour, with whom arrangements for said deposit had been made, defendant had paid out the whole amount thus deposited, on the orders or checks of R. R. Ward, who had been represented by said Seymour as fully authorized to draw on said fund. That the amount of $2500, acknowledged as a credit on said sum by plaintiffs, had been paid out by defendant to the order of said Ward, by virtue of, and under the instructions of said Seymour, to the knowledge of the latter, and with the approval of plaintiffs, who are, therefore, bound by the subsequent payments made by the defendant, in the same manner, on the order of said Ward.

The judgment of the District Court rejected plaintiffs’ demand and they have appealed. The record shows that, as far back as the 5th of September of that year, the arrangement touching this deposit was made between the cashier of the bank and the duly accredited agent of plaintiffs, Seymour; but that, owing to the interruption of communication between Okolona and New Orleans, on account of the yellow fever quarantine of that year, it was not carried out before the first of No[1347]*1347vember following. Beginning on that day, the bank commenced to pay and to debit to plaintiffs’ funds, the checks of R. R. Ward, who was then purchasing cotton at Okolona for consignment to plaintiffs, — and that by the 11th of that month Ward had drawn, and the bank paid, twenty' checks, aggregating $1500, — to cover which, Ward drew a draft on plaintiffs, to whom it was forwarded to its credit by defendant, and that said draft was duly honored by them; and that between, the 11th and the 18th of the same month, Ward drew, and the bank paid, out of the same fund, fourteen checks, amounting together to $1000, which amount was covered by another draft of Ward on plaintiffs, who received and honored it in due time. The record further shows that between the 18th of November and the 12th of December, the bank debited to that fund some twenty-eight checks of Ward, the last of which being for $300, and being by $106 41 in excess of the balance of the fund, was only partially charged to debit of plaintiffs, to wit: for $193 59. On the 26th of December Ward drew on plaintiffs for $2490 63, to cover the amount of checks drawn by him between the two dates last mentioned. But, on receipt of this draft, plaintiffs refused to allow credit for it to the defendant, to whom they returned it, and, oh the other hand, they drew in favor of their agent, Seymour, on the defendant, for that identical sum, as their balance in the bank, where the draff was duly presented and refused, whereupon it was protested by Seymour.

The whole controversy turns upon the nature of the contract made ' by plaintiffs, through their agent, Seymour, with the defendant bank, in the beginning of September.

Plaintiffs’ theory is that their funds were deposited with the bank, with a view to facilitate purchases of cotton, at Okolona, for consignment to their house, through customers who were to be selected and controlled by the bank, and that the orders of such customers were to be honored by the bank, only upon satisfactory proof that the funds drawn were used only for the purchase of cotton for, and actually consigned to plaintiffs, and that the bank was responsible to them for any amounts paid by it out of that fund, and not properly accounted for, or misapplied by, any purchasing customer. Hence, they contend that Ward, having failed to ship to them any cotton to represent the sum of $2490 63, rbmaining to their credit after the draft of November 18th, the bank is responsible to them for that sum, whether it was paid out to him or not, for it was the duty of the defendant, under the contract, to see that the funds drawn by Ward were actually used in the purchase of cotton, to be consigned to them.

This theory is denied by the officers of the bank, who contend that the funds were thus deposited to facilitate the purchase of cotton at Okolona, by plaintiffs’ own agents or customers, who were to be selected [1348]*1348by themselves, and after such persons were made known or accredited by plaintiffs to the bank, the latter was to honor the demand for funds emanating from the person or persons thus selected, and to charge the sums thus drawn to the debit of plaintiffs’ deposit. Hence, they charge that R. R. Ward having been represented to them by plaintiffs’ solicitor, Seymour, as a customer authorized to purchase cotton for them, and to draw on their fund, the bank recognized Ward’s orders for funds as binding upon both parties to the contract. The bank officers further charge that on the first of November, Ward, who had an account of his own at the bank, informed their cashier that, from the time he began to check on plaintiffs’ deposit in the bank, “ all his checks on the defendant were to be paid out of said deposit for investment in cotton to be consigned to plaintiffs ; ” and that all of said fund was thus drawn by Ward, who was the only person or customer ever referred to them touching said deposit by plaintiffs or by their agent Seymour. The testimony in the record, mostly parol, is unavoidably and painfully conflicting, and the witnesses being entirely unknown to us in reference to their veracity, we have been at great pains, in reading over and over their contradictory statements, to detect the truth, which is usually closely concealed in the rubbish of a discordant record.

Plaintiff’s theory is supported by the testimony'of their confidential agent, Seymour, and by a letter written by him, from Okolona, to his employers, dated the 5th of September, purporting to recite the contract or arrangement which he had made with Babbitt, the cashier of the bank, and which he claims to have read to Babbitt, who approved the same. Both of his statements are flatly contradicted by the cashier, and'by McIntosh, the president of the bank, who testifies that, in subsequent conversations with Seymour and Babbitt, the contract made was referred to and construed, without objection from Seymour, in the manner in which it was all through understood and executed by the defendant. Seymour denies that he ever authorized Ward to draw on plaintiffs’ fund, and that he ever represented him to the bank as thus authorized. But, on that most material point, he is flatly contradicted by McIntosh, the President, Babbitt, the cashier, by Ward himself, and by Moore, who was Ward’s clerk, who all state that Ward was thus represented and accredited by Seymour to the defendant.

In addition to those contradictions, Seymour’s testimony is greatly weakened by self-contradictions and other circumstances, which entitle it to very little weight in our opinion.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
33 La. Ann. 1346, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/t-l-airey-co-v-okolona-savings-institution-la-1881.